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regret a thing.
Orange County will roll out a new alternative sentencing program today aimed to
prevent juvenile misdemeanor offenders from
being involved in the criminal justice system.
The Misdemeanor Diversion Program
allows 16- and 17-year-old first-time offenders
to participate in a 90-day program aimed at
addressing the individuals issues and needs
and to prevent future offenses.
Caitlin Fenhagen, the MDP coordinator
and Orange Countys criminal justice resource
manager, will lead the program in Orange
County. The countys program is based off on a
model created by Durham Chief District Court
Judge Marcia Morey that has been used by
Durham County since 2014.
Fenhagen said one of the main goals of the
program is fixing the issues that might have
led the individual to commit the crime initially.
If they have a substance abuse problem,
well usually send them to ASAC, which stands
for adolescent substance abuse counseling,
Fenhagen said. If they have a mental health
issue, we have several programs that help with
mental health.
She said if there are no substance abuse
Connect NC Bond
The UNC system is also
News
POLICE LOG
Someone trespassed
at Toppers Pizza at 306 W.
Franklin St. at 10:33 p.m.
Wednesday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
Someone committed
larceny on the 100 block of
Pine Hill Drive at 9:00 p.m.
Wednesday, according to
Carrboro police reports.
The person stole medication valued at $20, reports
state.
Someone committed
larceny at the Carrboro
Food Mart at 207 W. Main
St. at 8:40 p.m. Wednesday,
according to Carrboro police
reports.
The person stole $3 worth
of beer, reports state.
Someone trespassed at
McCorkle Place at 2:37 a.m.
Wednesday, according to
Department of Public Safety
reports.
Spending Log
What it does: This app logs
your income and expenses
so you can keep track of how
youre spending your money.
It lets you set up categories
groceries, utilities, going out
so you can see where you
need to cut back, and avoid
running out of funds halfway
through the month.
PAIGE LADISIC
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
EDITOR@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
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ONLINE MANAGING EDITOR
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ENTERPRISE DIRECTOR
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COMMUNITY MANAGER
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UNIVERSITY EDITOR
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CITY EDITOR
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HAYLEY FOWLER
STATE & NATIONAL EDITOR
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ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT EDITOR
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PAT JAMES
SPORTS EDITOR
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You stay
active,
Chapel Hill
News
Cornerbacks Des
Lawrence and M.J.
Stewart helped lead the
Tar Heels to a No. 18
nation ranking in passing
defense a season ago.
Their return bodes well for UNCs
secondary, but there is still a ques-
Pauper
awakens
crowd
to
issues
Provosts office
ACADEMIC-ATHLETIC SCANDAL
checks up on
lecture classes
DTH/ALEX KORMANN
Russell Lamb, playing Melchior, and Natalie Myrick, playing Wendla, perform in Spring Awakening Wednesday.
because this one is way more different than any other, she said.
This prompted precautions.
We have to be careful because
there are all these triggers we
have to be aware of and make
sure we are not triggering the
audience, cast or production staff
members, Barksdale said.
She also said the show opens
up the conversation for people to
talk about these issues. And even
though the play takes place in
19th-century Germany, its issues
resonate in todays society.
Its so powerful because of
the fact that the shows issues
very much parallel todays soci-
SPRING AWAKENING
Time: 7 p.m. on April 15, 17, 18;
3 p.m. on April 16
Location: The ArtsCenter
Info: www.artscenterlive.org
COACHES WIVES
FROM PAGE 1
question.
My grandma still asks me,
Is John going to be home
for Thanksgiving? Billie
Papuchis said.
He aint been here the last
20 years, this 21st year hes not
coming either, jokes Sharmane
Porter, running backs coach
Larry Porters wife.
Christmas is often spent
in a hotel traveling for a bowl
game. But after years, everyone is used to it.
Ive given up on
SENTENCES
FROM PAGE 1
CHASE RICE
FROM PAGE 1
According to emails
released to The Daily Tar Heel,
Lackman emailed Carolina
Union Director Crystal King
on Dec. 9 informing her that
Rice was the artist (they were)
currently looking to book
BOG
FROM PAGE 1
Systemwide debt
The UNC system hired
First Tryon Advisors, a
financial advisory group, to
assemble a 372-page report
on the debt affordability of
each system constituent.
The study results show the
amount of debt each campus
is able to take on through
2020.
Though NCCU and others are listed as having low
debt capacity in the studys
results, it doesnt mean they
have no capacity to take on
debt. Michael Juby, director
of the First Tyron Advisors
team, clarified this point to
the board.
state@dailytarheel.com
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Help Wanted
SUNDAY SITTER
Wanted for 9 year-old boy beginning in May.
Must have reliable and safe transportation.
Must love SPORTS, creative play and dogs.
Most Sundays 9am-5pm. Job can continue into
fall, spring semesters. Saturday flexibility a
plus. $12/hr. cabbytwo@netscape.net.
UNC PSYCHIATRY PROFESSOR hiring part-
Help Wanted
For Rent
Help Wanted
FAIR HOUSING
MERCIA
For Rent
Help Wanted
Summer Jobs
SUMMER CAMP INSTRUCTORS. If you are
interested in working with kids in a fun environment, Chapel Hill Gymnastics is hiring
for summer camp instructors to work in our
gymnastics camps beginning June 6. Gymnastics or fitness experience preferred, but
not required. We will train the right candidate. Send a resume and the contact information of two professional references to
chelsey@chapelhillgymnastics.com.
CHAPEL HILL PARKS & RECREATION is hiring summer camp counselors, coordinators,
inclusion counselors, lifeguards, swim instructors and swim coaches for Summer 2016.
Visit www.townofchapelhill.org for more
information.
Volunteering
HEALTY VOLUNTEER
STUDY
For Rent
Walk to
Campus!
HOROSCOPES
If April 15th is Your Birthday...
Go for what you most want this year. Detail plans
for a work initiative launching after 5/9, with travels
and studies after 8/13. Partnership flourishes over
the next two years, beginning 9/9. High energy work
after 9/1 leads to an introspective phase after 9/16.
Find peace.
919-933-5296
Services
STARPOINT
STORAGE
NEED STORAGE SPACE?
(919) 942-6666
ITS EASY!
Do it by Pit
distance!
HeelsHousing.com
To get the advantage, check the day's rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.
Presbyterian
Campus
Ministry
Sundays at 10:30am
Creekside Elementary
919.797.2884
jrogers@upcch.org 919-967-2311
110 Henderson St., Chapel Hill
Thursdays Fellowship dinner
& program 5:45-8 PM
Weekly small groups
Sunday Worship at our six local Partner Churches.
Trips to the NC mountains & coast as well
as annual spring break mission opportunities.
www.uncpcm.com
Religious Directory
lovechapelhill.com
News
DURHAM Marcus
Paige likes brownies.
Not those prepackaged,
plastic-wrapped bricks,
though. And definitely no
nuts. But fresh out of the
oven, the ones that crumble
in your hands when you pick
them up. Yeah, those are the
ones.
Paige takes another bite
out of his. Hes in the auxiliary gym at Northern High
School in Durham. Not exactly his normal postgame dive
or snack for that matter.
But here he is, as part of
the 2016 ACC Barnstorming
Tour. The tour features ACC
seniors from across the state,
including North Carolinas
trio: Paige, Brice Johnson and
Joel James. The group moves
from town to town, playing
pickup basketball and fooling
around one last time together.
Theyll even head to Paiges
hometown of Marion, Iowa,
next week.
But fooling around was
the key Thursday. The game
was more performance than
practice.
Toddlers dunked after
Johnson picked them up, of
course. And Paige shot halfcourt shots because, well, if
ever there was a time, this
was it.
James, all 6-foot-11 of
him, lost a 3-point contest to
Dukes Marshall Plumlee, but
he entered a 3-point contest
nonetheless.
He even made two.
But ultimately, Thursday
was about more than a game.
Or brownies. It was about
three players who led a team
to the brink of everything, in
spite of all the obstacles and
DTH/ALEX KORMANN
UNC forward Brice Johnson (11) dunks the ball during the 2016 ACC Championship March 12.
For more
information, visit:
sustainability.unc.edu
earth week
at Carolina
Southern Resilience:
Traditional Foodways*
Tuesday, 4/19
Repair Fair
11am-2pm
Great Hall,
Student Union
4/19
games
2015 The Mepham Group. All rights reserved.
Level:
4
Complete the grid
so each row, column
and 3-by-3 box (in
bold borders) contains
every digit 1 to 9.
Solution to
Thursdays puzzle
Friday, 4/22
EARTH DAY
FESTIVAL
Live Music, Student Speakers,
Food & Games!
5-7pm
Bell Tower Amphitheater
Carolina Environmental Film
Festival
7-9pm, Varsity Theater
Sponsors: Sustainability @ UNC, Office of Waste Reduction and Recycling, CCCG, Edible Campus,
Environmental Affairs Committee, Epsilon Eta, Students Working for Environmental Action and Transition,
Institute for the Environment, Residence Housing Association, Fair, Local Organic Food, Renewable Energy
Special Projects Committee, Carolina Dining Services, Sonder Market, and EcoReps
Nothing finer
than a summer at Carolina!
Check out summer.unc.edu
4/21
is an option, too?
57 Nervous __
58 No-win situation
59 Doesnt back away
60 Gold rush figure
Down
1 Was googly-eyed
2 Place to bring a suit
3 Wading bird
4 Put on a pedestal
5 Beliefs
6 Bambi doe
7 Award-winning political
cartoonist Ted
8 Word with able or full
9 Munich : Jahr :: Madrid
: __
10 Hawaii Five-O
nickname
11 Landlocked Asian
nation
12 Heightened
13 Slow movements
14 Insult
Western?
40 Miss America
contestants array
41 Salsa brand
42 Room to maneuver
43 Where to emulate the
natives
44 More unpleasantly
moist
49 Dominate
50 Some Ivy Leaguers
52 Words with limit or
trap
55 Agnus __
56 Its in many poems
Opinion
CHRIS DAHLIE
JACK LARGESS
VISHAL REDDY
TREY FLOWERS
GABY NAIR
JACOB ROSENBERG
A Southern Urbanist
Kvetching board
LETTERS TO
THE EDITOR
Power of
action
and selfdoubt
kvetch:
In defense of Paintals
column on feminism
NEXT
Brian Vaughn
Editors Note
Paige Ladisic reflects on her
time as editor-in-chief.
EDITORIAL
EDITORIAL
TO THE EDITOR:
I write in support of
Jaslina Paintals column.
The letter published from
David Hawisher polices
Paintals tone while denigrating her worth as a reporter,
demands empirical or theoretical proof and concludes
that the harsh critique of
mainstream feminism is
unnecessarily divisive.
Hawisher did not debate
the successes and drawbacks of the second-wave
feminism. It was about
tearing someone down for
daring to unapologetically
criticize white feminism.
Hawisher believes that
demonizing even progressives who disagree is
wrong. Darkmatter write,
as Black and brown activists have argued forever,
calls for unity without seriously engaging the reality
of difference are really just
a way of incorporating the
people you actively oppress
into frameworks that continue to oppress them. If
progressives maintain a
position that contributes
to oppression, I fail to see
what is wrong about confronting those views.
For theory: Audre Lorde,
Cherre Moraga, Kate
Bornstein, Gloria Anzalda,
to start. Furthermore, as
bell hooks writes, people
can practice theorizing
without ever possessing
the term, just as we can live
and act in feminist resistance without ever using the
word feminism. Although
Paintal does not ostensibly
cite peer-reviewed articles,
the article is saturated with
theoretical understandings.
Articles such as Paintals
highlight the best of what
The Daily Tar Heel has to
offer insightful, concise
thought pieces. We would
all do well to grapple with
content that challenges us.
Anna Dardick
Graduate Student
School of Public Health
TO THE EDITOR:
I was surprised Thursday
morning while reading The
Daily Tar Heel in Lenoir
to find out that the Honor
Court resembles a campus
version of Scarecrows court
in The Dark Knight Rises.
From the article by Bradley
Saacks, Honor Court penalties for DWI vary, I gleaned
that the Honor Court:
1. Ignores precedent
altogether.
2. Punishes students for
DWIs regardless of whether they have been convicted
of any crime by the actual
judicial system.
3. Determines the severity
of punishment for equivalent
crimes, in part, using the
students financial aid status.
In winter, do they sentence guilty students to walk
over icy bricks near the Pit?
Will Parker
Senior
History
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